Harmonesica: Preparation

Right. I've kept this project a moderate secret for a couple weeks now,
and all that time I've been trying to think of a way to spring the big reveal on the last page,
the last image, something. I couldn't. The very nature
of an illustrated walkthrough prevents any sort of surprise ending. So I'll just blow
the surprise right now.

That's a NES cartridge and a harmonica. I think you know where
this is going. This is going exactly where the
intersection of nostalgia and commercialism should have gone like ten freaking years ago.
I've googled all sorts of combinations like "NES harmonica" and "nintendo harmonica" and "NES
cartridge instrument" and I can't find anything like this. Everybody talks about blowing on
the game like a harmonica, but as far as I know I'm the first person on the Internet
to actually use a harmonica.

Mint chocolate chip ice cream provided for scale.

I began my journey with what I thought was a solid plan. I had a cart
I was willing to bust open, I had a harmonica I had purchased specifically to be busted
open, and I had a brand-new Dremel to bring the magic. There's also a package of Dremel drill
bits and a bag of #4-40 3/4" bolts with included nuts.

The most important thing to consider in this whole venture is which game
to use. You want to use something that you don't mind never playing again; ideally, you have two
carts and one of them doesn't work any more. You have to strike a balance between a game you
want to sacrifice and a game you will essentially be making out with. Don't get caught in
public frenching tunes through Total Recall,
is what I'm saying.

Tecmo Super Bowl is a solid choice. Everybody remembers it fondly, but it's
still pretty easy to find and all of its football knowledge now borders on lies. New England Patriots
are the worst team in the game? Dominant 49ers? It is a mad bizarro NFL, and Bo Jackson is ridiculous
hax. The first person to try this mod with an authentic golden Zelda 1 cart wins three Internets.

Okay, time to look at the harmonica. I chose the Hohner Pocket Pal because it
was like 10 minutes before Schmidt Music closed and this was the cheapest model. I didn't do any
fancy measuring or soul-searching in the store because hey, it's $7 and if this doesn't work out it's
still a harmonica.

Turns out the Pocket Pal was a pretty awesome choice. It unscrews into three
pieces; two decorative aluminum covers and the main harmonica. You can see the tiny screws and one of
the tiny decorative nuts in the picture below. The other nut is missing because Edmond decided to
play with it until it disappeared and that's why I can't have nice things :(

Here's an angle on the harmonica. The only obstacles here are the black
plastic tabs on the top and bottom. They're designed to brace the aluminum pieces, but we won't
have any use for them.